Funding for the digitization of this title was provided by R.J. Taylor, Jr. Foundation.
About The Hawkinsville dispatch. (Hawkinsville, Ga.) 1866-1889 | View Entire Issue (March 23, 1871)
THE HAWKINSVILLE DISPATCH. VOL. 5. K Would For*ct. Oh! bid me not recall *<• p»»t. Yootnany Jov* with it hare fled; And many nope*, which once were bright, Like autumn leaves, lie crush’d and dead. Oh! say not that ’tis sweet to think One hour we ne’er again can see. The memory of the scenes and friends Os other days, is sad to me. ruw many hearts congenial, truth, And forms too fair, too frail to last, Ind simnv smiles, and jocund scenes. Lie burled In the gloomy past. rhen, say not that’tis sweet to think On happier hours forever flown ; Oh! rather teach me to forget The Joys 1 once could call my own. j A Bouton bank president has gained rotoriety by earefhlly turning up his rest several inches when at his desk to keep it from wearing out. A massactiusetts boy told his moth >r, on returning homo the other day, hitt George Washington’s widow had >oen in his school begging money to vpair his tomb. | A New Hampshire man, when asked io give his consent to the marriage Os his daughter, turned with a 1 ream ing countenance to the applicant and answered': “ Yes, yes; and don’t you know some likely young man who will take tho other TANARUS” A man near Thomasville proposes to raffle his plantation of 840 acres. A Young officer not over fond of fighting [waited on General Steinmetz on the eve of battle,to Teqnest leave of absence to visit his farther and moth er, both of whom were extremely ill. YeV’-saidthe General, “ honor your Other and your that your days may be long." "Three cotn]>anics of Federal soldiers jest Atlanta Friday night for Colum bia,%.C. The Columbus Enqirer says: “ Gil bert M. Anderson had arranged to commit suicide had his sentence not been commuted. The Instrument of death was a strip of tin rolled up in the shape of a pistol barrel, with a large cartridg placed in it, and so ar ranged as to explode by concussion.” A IHnsgcroua Innovirtloa. A servant girl in Easton, Penn., read a s’.ory in the papers which told l.r*w the hunter of Siberia, when they arc hungry and have no food, lie down, place a board over the stom ach, and get their companions to sit on it. If we are to believe the narra tion, the Siberian hunters immediately rise like a giant refreshed with wine, feeling just as good as if he had eat ■en a hearty Christmas dinner. Now, this domestic, upon turning the mat ter over within the darkened recess of her intellect, could not preccive why the prncipal could not apply as well to an American babe as to a wild rover in Siberia. So when the «ext offspring or her employer cried with hunger, this woman, instead of giving it sustenance immediately from I glass bottle with a gum thing on the ozzle, went and got the pie-board, pread it over that unsuspecting child, nd sat on it a quarter of an hour, tike King Henry, “it never smiled Again,” and the hired girl told the tnoa who has charge of the jail that there certainly must be something Wrong about that Siberian hunter sys tem, or else the newspapers did not explain it properly. Homicide in Mohganton, West yreoiNiA,—The Fairmont West Vir ginian says an old man named John •tenkin6 was killed in Morgantown a few nights ago by George Smith, who struck him with a poker, crushing his skull. The assault originated in • quarrel at cards. Smith’s wife, on learning what her husband had done, became, it is feared, hopelessly iusane, Smith was arrested. A young carpet-bagger, a white man named Johnson, publicly married a negro wench at Grenada, Miss., a a few days since, and on the second night after the wedding wps taken from the bed by a party of young men, who, after presenting him with A full suit of tar and feathers, notified jHim to emigrate. This ho did, but ■threaten# to return with State ipilitia. || An aged heathen, about seventy-five Hears old, saw a loeamotive and heard H whistle the other day near Griffin, ftr the tjp time in his life. He broke Hbr the woods like a startled deer. HAWKINSVJLLE, GA., THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 1871. Had Calamity. Jefferson Cos,, Ga., March 10. Editor Central Georgian : About 3 o’clock on Thursday morning last, the residence of Mr. John Jones took fire and was entirely consumed, to gether with cvrything of value there in contained. Hut. the sadost |»art of all is yet to be told—the burning to death of their only boy, darling little Willie. When the alarm was given, Mr. Jones hastened to the strive room, the origin of the lire, and attempted to stay the flames. His wife and three children were all in n room far thest from the fire. Mrs. Jones took her babe in her arms and wont out, forgetful of the unconcious Willie sleeping sweetly iu the same bed. Nor was he remembered—though am ple time elapsed to have saved him —until his faint cry was heard amid the crackling flames. .At this awful discovery the frantic parents would have rushed madly into the flames in the vain hope of rescuing their perish ing child had thqy wot been kept back by those present. Their intense ag ony was fearful to behold. Willie’s poor little liody was almost consumed. Mr. Jones was badly burned on both hands and in the face. The grief of the stricken parents is terri ble. The reflection that Willie could have been saved, makes the terrible calamity almost unbearable. They have the unbounded sympathises of the community. Yours, 11. Beccltcr aud ilie fcnvlor The llev. Henry Ward Beecher re cently delivered an eloquent discourse on the “Life of Christ.” The shak er's object was to prove that our Sav ior’s life was one of joy. “ His cru cifixion as portrayted in the Mora vian hymn,” the reverned gentleman exclaimed, “was enough to drive one wild.” There were some people who at stated times forced themselves into a minor key of soul, in order to sym pathize with our Savior’s sufferings. He would as soon essay such n thing as attempt to walk fiom New York to Europe under water. A gentleman here rose and said that he had always believed Christ to lie a man of sorrow. He had suffered for the love of men. Mr. Beecher de clared that because Chirst had suf fered intensely it did not follow that he should endure jierpetoal agony to prove his love for us. Suppose an erring, discarded child, lying pros trate with fever, sees an angel with a mother's face bending over it. That mother tends till the fever is abated and the child well. The fact would de monstrate the tenderness of a moth er’s love, but it would not be neces sary for her to tend tho sufferer for a life time in order to prove her affec tion. Mr. Beecher added that Christ was a healthy man—emphatically a joyful and active man. He once went t" a wedding which must have consumed fifteen days, and created gallons of wine to prolong festivities. At this wedding our Savior appears to have conducted himself simply as a guest, and mingled with others on social equality. A Terrible Cnrse. It is related of a family in Dorohes* ter, Mass., that every dark-eyed mem' ber of it, for the past fifty years, has become blind at the age of twenty to twenty-five years. Those with blue eyes escape the terrible affliction. The local gossips tell a romantic story how, some sixty years ago, a beauti ful black-eyed gir\ reduced by blind ness to beggary, was led astray by two boys of this family, and left bv them ia a swamp, end who, when she found herself deserted among the tan gled uaderbrush, turned her prayer, that they would extricate her, into a dying curse, praying that their chil dren for seven generations might be as helpless as she was. Goon Advisers.—They tell on the three hundred delegates that assem bled in Agricultural Conventionin Ma con that three fourths of them visited that place for the purpose of buying com. If so, they ought to be good advisers. The men who did not raise com last year know now what a sad mistake they made, and will profit by experience.— Columbus Sun. AoaiCTn,TimAi, Meeting. —Quite a good number of planters, including some of the oldest and best in the county met at the Court House last Tuesday. A Houston County Agri cultu-al Association was formed, which decided to have a Fair next fall at Fort Valley.— Perry Journal. Colonel D. W. Lewis, Secretary of tho State Agricultural Society, has moved his office to Macon. Thirty-four persons joined the Cen tral Presbyterian Chnrcb, at Atlanta last Sunday. An Indiana Sheriff is perplexed. While taking a horse thief to the Sute Prison, he fell asleep in the rail road car, ana when be woke up the prisoner was gone. He thinks he must have trot off at a station for a drink and got left. Letter From Texas. From tho Cartorsvllle Standard. Johnson Station, Texas, ) February 8,1871. j The people in this portion of Texas are preparing to plant their crops of com and cotton. Their mode and manner of work is all new to me. They break their land with oxen. I frequently see from four to eight yoke of cattle strung out to one plow and that not in the sod either. The wheat crop bids fair at this time to make an average crop, although cold weather has hurt it to some extent. Wheat of the old crop is very scaree and high. Flour is worth from five to six cents per pound, and not good at that. Oats are a very sure crop in northwest Texas; they make, when sown early, from forty to fifty bush els i»r acre, the yellow and large white varieties are thought to bo the liest for this climate. Sweet patntocs do well here, growing to a very large size—in fact, all vegetables and field crops generally, that grow in the States East of the Mississippi do well here. This country needs raaclmnics of all kinds, especially blaksmiths and shoe makers, and I will add chair makers also. Why, sir, I have-not seen alive shoe maker since I have been in the State, and blacksmiths are very scarce. I would also like to see a few house carpenters come, for they' ar? very scarce. The society here is good; churches and schools plenty, and conveniently situated; deer, tur keys, squrrels, prairrie chickens, and last but not least, is the regular old mule cared Habits are plenty. The boys have fine si>ort after the mule rabits, they' are about the fastest thing that runs. Wild cats and wolves arc very troublesome. Fish are plen ty, mostly of the cat and buffalo spe cies. We are in about one mile of the Trinity river, (west fork) fifteen miles below Fort Worth. We live in the edge of the cross timber and cul tivate the prairie land. All tho tim bered land is sandy soil, timber very short and scrubby. Post oak, from black jack, cotton wood, elm and spotted oak, form the variety'. There is not a pine tree closer than one hun dred ami twenty-five miles. This streak of cross timber runs from North-east to South-west, and is from eight to twelve miles wide, and is thickly settled iu some places. The timber land, in my opinion, beats the prairie makingcotton. I have heard of. 2800 pounds of seed cotton being gathered from one aero without ma nure. Cotton is anew thing with the people of this scctiou—they have on ly made three crops. There is sever al fields here now with a thousand pounds to tho acre not picked. One gentleman just come in from Arkan sas last year made nine hundred bush els of corn and twenty-eight bale's of cotton, just himself and two small boys, he being a Methodist preacher, probably lost some time in preaching the gospel. I can tell better about these things after I am here twelve or eighteen months. I have seen the preacher’s cotton, and do see it every time I pass, for a good deal of it is in tho patch yet, not picked out. The winter here has been the hardest known by the oldest inhabitants. Yours Respectfully, John G. Beard. • War is about to be declared be tween Augusta and Hamburg. Au gusta has revived the toll on foot passengers over the bridge which connects the two places, and the ne gro mayor of Hamburg has levied a contribution of five dollars on every Augusta cow that shall stray into the dominions of his august majesty. He also threatens to charge toll at his end of the bridge. A gang of rowdies visited the house of Mrs. Merritt, a widow, in Newton county last week, and demanded milk which was refused ; whereupon they revenged themselves by cutting off the tails and ripping open the bags of all her cows. Six convict Federal soldiers while at work near Fort Pulaski, under guard, one day last week, disarmed the guard, and made their escape to a small island near by. They were pursued, however, aud all but one captured. Bolivar (Tenn.) has had a tornado. It traveled about sixty miles an hour. Houses were blown away, churches removed, fences scattered and demi johns smashed. The tornado came from Helena, Arkansas. It destroyed twenty-two houses in Pocahontas, a village on the Memphis snd Charles ton railroad. The annual meeting of the Georgia Teachers Association will be held in Colnmbns the first Tuesday, Wednes day and Thursday of May next. The finding of a human skull on the banks of the Chattahoochee, near Col umbus, is exciting some comment in that section. A pew in the First Presbyterian Church at Augusta, sold Tuesday, for seven hundred dollars. The annual ■wroesiMtit is seventy-flTe dollars. L. J. aUKLMAHTIX. JOHN FLAKNflity L. J. GUILMARTIfI & CO., Ootton F’a.ot.ors, —AND— Gen’l Commission Merchants, Bay Streot, SAVANNAH, GA. Agents for Bradley'" Snnrr-pliospliate ol Lime, Lowell Mills Yarns and Domestics, etc., etc. Bagging, Hope, aud Iron Ties, always on hand. Usual facilities extended to customers, sept l-6m • A. WESTCOTT, Dealer In Stoves and Cooking Utensils, And Manufacturer of Tinware, (Slicet Troth, etc. Roofflng and Guttering promptly done. Lightning Rods put up at short notice. Agent for the Harris Dow Law Cotton Becd Planter. 1 have in store some excellent Cooking Stoves, which I will sell at Macon prices, freight added. Come and see what I have. A. WESTCOTT, frlilO-ctCm Ilawkinsvillc. Wanted —Agents. $75 to $250 per month, Eveyrwhcro male and female, to introduce the GENUINE IMPROVED COMMON SENSE FAMILY SEWING MACHINE This Machine will stitch, hem, Ml, tuck, quilt, cord, bisd, braid and embroider in r most superior manner. Price only sls Fully licensed and warranted for five years. We will pay SI,OOO for any machine' that will sew ar stronger, mere beautiful, oi more clastic seam than ours. It make file " Elastic Lock Stitch.” Every second stitch can Iks cut. and "lift the cloth canno< Iks pulled apart without tearing It. W< pny Agents from $75 to $350 per montl and expenses, or a commission from which twice that amount can be made. Add res.- BECOKB & CO.. Boeton. Mau.; Pittebury, Pa. : St. Jyouit, Mo., or Chicago, IU. mrJ-tai SUNDRIES. PERFUMERY, BOOKS, STATIONERY, POCKET CUTLERY, FINE RAZORS, FIBII HOOKS AND LINES—A fine assortment at J. A. THOMPSON’S fet)2-ly Prog Store. $5 TO $ lOPtll DAY, ~~ MEN, WOMEN, BOYS and GIRISwho engage in our new hnsinegs make from $5 to $lO per day in their own localities. Ful l particulars and instructions sent tree lw mall. Those in need of permanent, profl table work, should address at once. Ueo. Stinson & Cos., Portland, Maine. mar.Sd TO THE WORKING CLASS —Wf are now prepared 10 furnish all classes with constant employment at home, the wliolc of the time or for the spare moments. Bus iness new, light and profitable. Persons of cither sex easily earn from 50c. to $5 per evening, and a proportional sum by devo ing their whole time to the business'. Boys tnd girls earn nearly as much as men. That all who see this notice may send their address, and test the business, wc make this tin part-elided offer: To such as arc not well satisfied, we will send $1 to pay for the trouble of writing. Full particulars, a valuable sample which will do to com mence work on, and a copy of The IVo pi*'t Literary Companion —one of the largest and liest family newspapers published—all sent free by mail. render, if you want permanent, profitable work, address, E. C. ALLEN & CO., niar2-3m Augusta, Maine. Notice to Debtors and Creditors All persons indebted to the -estate 4»f G. D. Wilcox, late of Tcllair, deceased, are hereby notified to come forward and make payments, and those having demands will present them according to law. ALLIS E. WILCOX, mar. 9 Adm’rx. Abbots waitti»-43m1 MONTH) bv the AMERICAN KNIT TING MACHINE CO. BOSTON. MASS, or ST. LOUIS, MO. . mar.SMhn GEORGlA—Pulaski county. Whereas, Charlie Mullis, administra tor on the estate of John Evans, deceased, applies to me for letters of dismission from said mist: These are, therefore, to cite and admon ish all persons concerned to be and appear at my ojgce within the lime prescribed by law, to show cause, if any they have, why said letters should not be granted the ap plicant. J. J. SPARROW. mar.o-3m pr fee $4 Ordinary. WANTED— AGENTS, (S2O per day.) to sell the celebrated HOME SHUT TLE SEWING MACHINE. Has the under feed, makes tho “ loebetiteh," (alike on both sides,) sod is fulhy tie*rued. Tike beet and cheapest family Sewing Machine in the market. Address JOHNSON* CLARKE & CO.. Boston. Maes.; Pitts bnrg, HI ,or St. Louis. Md- GUANO Sold for Cotton. TPrioes TR,ed-ucecL Wc have decided to'sell a limited quan tity of tho following standard Guanos at our reduced credit prices, as below, payable in Middling Cotton at 15 cents per pouud. The Cotton to be duliverd at planter’s near est ileiiot, in good order, properly packed in good Imggfng, on or before the Ist No vember, 1871, and better or poorer grades to be taken at proportionate prices on tho basis of 15 cents for Middling ; Plinmix Guano, at Savannah aud Charles on, $57 50; at Augusta, -$62 56—with $1 per ton added for drayage. Wilcox, Gibbs* Co.'s Manipulated Guan no ,at Savannah and Clialcston, $7(1; at Augusta, s7s—with $1 per ton added for drayage. __ Guauno, Salt and Plaster Compound, at Savannah and Charleston, SUS ;at Au gusta, s7o—with $1 per ton added tor drayage. Our cash prices arc $lO per ton less titan the nb.ivc prices. Planters desiring to buy Fertilzers in this way will do well to order at once (either through our agents or direct,) ns we may not continue to sell very long on these terms. Wc have a good stock and can fill ' orders promtly. Our Guanos are better than ever sold itefore, (so says I)r."Means, the State Inspector of Georgia), because, they are in better condition, being dryer j and our machinery for preparing our mani pulated Guano, Salt and Plaster Com pound. having been improved, as well as our facilities in every way lx-ing better than formerly. Our stock is all Imported direct to Savannah and Charleston w hulk. Our Peruvian Guano, used Is The Manipulated and Guano, Salt and Fluster Compound is not Uuanappe, bat is the real No. 1 Peru vian, of the best quality, font the Chincha Island and is thu first, and only cargo of Chiticlia Island, Guano ever imported direct to Savannah. Planters can. therefore,dep end upon getting nothing but the very best from us, and on the most favorable terms ever offerd to the planting public. WILCOX, GIBBS* CO., Importers and Dealers in Guano, 148 Bay street, Savannah, Ga. 151 East Bay street. Charleston, S. C. 341 Broad street, Augusta, Ga. BO2EMAN~& PATE, Agents nt Ilawkinsvillc, who have for sale all of Ihe above named Guanos Cotton taken in exchange at 15 cents per pouud. mar2-3m Furniture. We offer for sale, at Cheap Cash Prices, Ca/binet. F'mrnit-ure, PARLOR AND BEDROOM SUITS, Also Patent Spring Bed Bottoms AND MATTPESSES. Chain) of all descriptions and all and every variety of Furniture kept and manu factured by first-class workmen. Fisk’s Patent Metallic Burial Cases, The best ariiclo in the market. Also Coffins in Wood and imitation of Rosewood, and other styles neatly finished. Schneider & Slarowski, Corner of Broad and Jackson Streets, llawkinsvii.i.e, Ga. fcbO-ctly Garden Seeds. I have just received a very large lot of Fresh. Garden Seed. ONION SETS, and Irish. Potatoes, Which I am offering at reasonable prices for Caali. Call at J. A. THOMPSON'S DRUG STORE. febS-ly The Barber Shop. HAVING secured the acrvic.es of a first class Barber, as Assistant, in the per son of Mr. Tom Hannon. I take pleasure in stating that we are cuabied to do work promptly and in the best style, at the fol lowing rates: Shaving.. 30 cents Shaving and Hair Cutting 50 “ Hair Cutting atone. 40 “ Shampooing 40 “ Hair Pre-wing 10 “ Hrning Razors 50 “ Hair Dyeing different prices. Six Shaving Tickets for One Dollar. Regular customers can have their hair daessed free of charge. , A nice lot of Hair Oils, etc., kept on hand and for sale cheap. Thankful to the public for tho liberal patronage heretofore, awarded me, and soliciting « continuance of the same, I remain, very respectfully, fcbß-tf JOHN K- PARTIX. lSTotioe. Thirty day* after date application w ill be made to the Court of Ordinary ol W il- Cox countv, for leave to sell all the Ir ad belonging to the estate of Mark Ram y .to bsaeed SARAH RANEV. | fcbtt-Md pr foe $4 Aximiniftrat. fx. NO.-12 Guardian’* Sale. By virture of an order from the Conri of ordinary of Pulaski county, 4 will aell as guardian of Needham Davis, William Da vis, Ray Davis, Warran Davis, Elizabeth Davis and Nancy Davis, minor children of Z. L. Davis, deceased, before'the oouft house door in the town 'of Hawkinsvillr in said county, on the flist Tuesday in May next, all of tlie interest of said minors (each having one eight in lots of land Nos. 152 and 153 In 20th district of origi nally Wilkinson now Pulaski county j containing four bundled acres more or less. Terms cash. NANCY DAVIS, Guardian. ' Mar 16-tds pr foe $5 50 To the Creditors of the Sfctato of N. Y. Powell, dec’d. John J. * J. D. Eubanks,) Bill to marshal Adm'rs of N. Y. Powell, ( Assets in Pu _ „ . va -, flaski Superior P. H. Loud, etal. J Court. WHEREAS, at the October Teffb. 1870, bis Honor, J. R. Alexander Judge of tite Superior Courts of the South ern Circuit, did decree that the muffler ih dispute In the above stated case should b»* referred to the undersigned as Master Its Chunccry, with instruction to 'invekftffktt and report upon the same. The creditor of said estate are therefore notified to bo and appear, personally or by attorney,iff my office iu Hawkinsyffte, Ga., Tuesday, tho 28th day of March, at 10 o’clock, h. to prove their debts in order tbift tbeff dignity and amounts may be ascertained, and further, tliut all persona accounting, shall bring in their accounts in the form of debtor and creditor. CfIAS. C. Klßßfifc, mar2-4t Master in Chancery. Telfair Executor’* Sole. BY virtue of an order from the Court of Ordinary of Telfair county, will be •sold on the first Tuesday in April next, before tho Court House door in tho town of Jacksonville, in said county, lot of hind No. 860, in the Uth district of said county, containing 202 J acres, more or less. Sold as tlie properly of Joseph Williams, de ceased, for the benefit of creditors. Terms Cash. Feb. 28. 1871. W. J. WILLIAMS. WM. F. WILLIAMS, mar2-td« [pr fee ss] Executors. Telfair Sheriff Said. WILT. Ik* sold, on tbc first Tuesday in April next, before ihe Court-house tl"<>r in the town ol' Jacksonville, within the legal hours of sale, the following lots of land, to wit: Noe. 220 ami 830, lying and being in tho 8tl» district of Telfair county, levied on as the property of Peter H. Coflee, adtnlnistm tor on the estate of Mark Wilcox, to satisfy a tax fi fa. Aiao at the same time and place, lots of land, Nos. 882 and 808, being and lying In tho Bth district of Telfair county, to satisfy a tax fi fa agabißt D. W. Crimraon. Also nt the same time and place, lots of land Nos. 308, 158 and 145, all being sad lying in the 14th district of Telfair county, to satl-tiy four tax fi fas, for 1867,1868,18& and 1870 against Barnabas Barron. Said pr.iiM-ity levied on by a Constable,.' and pointed out by A. 11. Graham, tax col lector. JOHN LARKEY, mar.2t.ls SherilL _— .. Irwin County Sheriffs Sale. . Will I e sold before the Court bouse door in the town of Irwmvillo oh the flrstTues day in April next, within the legal hours of sale the following property to wit: Lott of laud 120, 154. 153,146, all in the. 4th District of Irwin county, levied on to sntisfya tax ll fa,issued by Mark Pridgen. Tax Collector of Irwin county, for tb. year 1870, against Junes M- Mulvany, Cap!, ot the Irish Volunteers of Charleston, South Car-dlna. J. Z. BUTTON, febl6-tds Sheriff. Telfair Postponed Sheriff Sal# Will be sold before tlie Court-house dbnr in Jacksonville, within the usual hours < I sale, on the first Tuesday in April nex.; the following property: Lot of lar.d No. (312,) three hundred an f twelve in the 14th district, levied on s tlie property of S. W. Burch, to satut - two superior Court fifas; one in fhvor J. L. Warren. Executor, and one in favon of Wm Williams and Wiley J. Williams, Executors, vs. said Burch. febKWUs JOHN LARKEY, Bh’ffi. IT otic©. By vtrtin of nn order from tlie Court < f Ordinary Pulaski county will be sol l before the Court House dbor in the toe ' ot Ilawkinsvillc the first Tuesday in Apt if next, between the ttaual hours of a-ii •' the f. flowing lot of lautd (236) two hue dred and thirty six ftr the thirteenth di trict originally Wilkinson now Pubs! ' county. Said land sold under the Inrun. I. ranee of the widows dower. Terras oti day of safe. JOHN A. HARRELL, feliU-tda pr fee S 50 Guardis*. Georgia—Pulaski Coun’y. Whereas, Nicholas Rawlins applies -let me for letters of adiwfois (ration, de bonus non, with the will annexed of the eatan* of Simeon A. Roland deceased: These are, therefore, to rite and admon i«h nil parries roneeraeff, to be Snd sppSs* at my office witldn the time prescribed b* law »o show cause, if any they have, why said letters should not be- granted. J. J. SPARROW, Ordinary, mar 0-1 m pr fee $3 SO « - : : GEORGlA— Pulaski County. . Whcreae, 8. J. Martin. Guardian for C. A. Martin. Ann E. Man hmaa, snd A xet C. Neal, applies to me for letters of diemi* pinn from said trust: These are therefore to rite and admon is F all [tersons concerned to be and appear a ' my office within the time prescribed law and show cause. If any they have, why said letters should not be greeted the ap, plirant. Given under my hnaff and offleia f signature. . J. J. SPARROW, mar2~4od [pr fee $5 50] Ordinary GEORGlA—Telfair County. Where*", H. L. Wells having applied me for setting apsrt and valuation or Hon stead, this is to notify all persons concern thai l will! pate upon tlie same at mv off in Jacksonville on the SBth day of Msr tost, * 10 © clock A. M. W. P. CAMP BULL